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Spain and Italy head EU"s Kyoto blacklist
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 12 - 11 - 2009

Spain and Italy are the European Union"s worst
performers when it comes to cutting greenhouse-gas emissions, new
figures released by the European Commission today showed, dpa reported.
Embarrassingly, Denmark, which is due to host UN climate-change
talks at the end of the year, is also likely to miss the reduction
targets set by the Kyoto Protocol on fighting climate change unless
it buys credits for cuts which other countries have made.
But the EU as a whole is on track to hit the reduction targets set
by the protocol because of a strong performance in heavyweights
Britain, France and Germany, officials said.
"These projections further cement the EU"s leadership in
delivering on our international commitments to combat climate change.
They show the EU"s (rich members are) well on track to meet (their)
Kyoto target," EU Environment Commissioner Stavros Dimas said.
According to the European Commission"s annual report for 2007, the
latest year for which figures exist, Italy"s emissions topped 550
million tons of carbon dioxide (CO2, the main greenhouse gas), 6.9
per cent more than they were in 1990.
Under the Kyoto Protocol, Italy was meant to cut its emissions to
482 million tons by 2012, 6.5 per cent below the 1990 figure -
leaving it the challenge of cutting emissions by over 10 per cent in
the next three years if it is to meet its commitments.
In the same way, Kyoto allowed Spain - in the 1990s one of the
EU"s most backward economies - to boost its emissions by 15 per cent.
But the country"s subsequent economic boom, based largely on
massive property development, pushed emissions up by a staggering
52.6 per cent.
That means that Spain will have to trim emissions by a quarter
over the next three years if it is to hit the Kyoto target.
Denmark has cut its emissions by almost 4 per cent since 1990, but
its Kyoto target is for a 21-per-cent cut, leaving it with an uphill
struggle to hit the mark.
The commission report acknowledged that the three countries will
only be able to hit their Kyoto targets if they buy large numbers of
emissions-reduction credits from countries which have already hit
their targets - effectively paying them for cutting emissions.
Together, the trio could need up to 190 million tons" worth of
credits, with an estimated market value of 1.9 billion euros (2.9
billion dollars).
Austria, Finland and Ireland will also have to invest heavily into
emissions credits to hit their Kyoto targets.
However, at the other end of the scale, the EU"s heavyweights,
Britain, France and Germany, have all smashed through their Kyoto
targets already. Together, they account for around 40 per cent of all
EU emissions, meaning that their good performance has a major effect
on the EU"s overall average.


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